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  • The data set will be launched in the first quarter of 2020. N100 Map Data is a generalisation of N50 Map Data and cartographically adapted to a scale of 1:100 000. N100 Map Data covers mainland Norway delimited by the national borders with neighbouring countries and the territorial bounndaries in the sea.

  • The data set will be launched in the first quarter of 2020. N100 Raster is a reiteration of the themes in N100 Map Data and has a presentation that is similar to N50 Raster as far as possible. N100 Raster covers mainland Norway and is delimited by the national borders with neighbouring countries and the territorial boundaries in the sea. N100 Raster is based on N100 Map data and distributed weekly.

  • The data set will be launched in the first quarter of 2020. N100 Raster is a reiteration of the themes in N100 Map Data and has a presentation that is similar to N50 Raster as far as possible. N100 Raster covers mainland Norway and is delimited by the national borders with neighbouring countries and the territorial boundaries in the sea. N100 Raster is based on N100 Map data and distributed weekly.

  • Potential accessible coastal zone is calculated based on terrain, roads, railways, cultivated land areas, buildings and coastline. Data are from different sources and processed into land use surfaces by Statistics Norway. The surfaces which are not affected by anthropogenic activity are considered potentially available for outdoor activities. The different surfaces also contain features showing the steepness with following categories: little steepness <3, some steepness 3-10, large steepness 10-25 and very high steepness > 25 degrees. Potential accessible coastal zone are geographical areas with boundaries changing over time depending on anthropogenic activity.

  • The national groundwater database GRANADA is available as web map service. The service is related to groundwater in Norway, and provides information on wells and springs in soils and rock, probing, groundwater quality and monitoring of groundwater.

  • The dataset covers areas where there is a particularily great risk of fire contagion as defined by the Norwegian Directorate for Civil Protection in cooperation with the Directorate for Cultural Heritage. Listed wooden buildings environments where there is a risk that fire in one building spreads to the other buildings.

  • SEFRAK is a national register of older building and other cultural heritage objects in Norway. SEFRAK is an acronym for Secretariat for the registration of immovable cultural heritage monuments, which was the name of the institution that started working on the register. Today the responsibility for the registration and maintenance of the data lies with the Directorate for Cultural Heritage. All buildings built before 1900 are supposed to be registered, except ruins. In Finnmark the limit for the latest building date of a building was moved to 1945. Houses in the SEFRAK registry are not considered listed, and there are no specific restrictions on the buildings. The SEFRAK registry does not affect a buildings listing status.

  • Database for the management of all listed cultural heritage and cultural environments in Norway, as well as other types of cultural heritage types.

  • The dataset covers cultural environments protected according to the Cultural heritage act § 20, areas included in UNESCO’s World Heritage list, and urban cultural environments of national importance. The cultural environments that are protected according to the Cultural heritage act § 20 have the same protection as any protected cultural heritage site or monument. Candidates to the UNESCO World Heritage list are proposed by the Directorate for Cultural Heritage based on cultural environments that are considered to have international cultural heritage value. Urban cultural environments of national importance include towns and villages in Norway that contain cultural environments of national cultural heritage value. These cultural environments are not subject to formal protection, but it cannot be ruled out that some of these environments, or objects within them, should in the future become protected according to the Cultural heritage act.

  • Buildings and churches that are protected according to Norwegian law, either automatically, permanently or temporary by individual order, or by regulation. Buildings can be protected through several paragraphs in the Cultural heritage act. Buildings that are protected through individual order (§ 15), and government owned buildings that are protected through regulation (§ 22a). Buildings that are older than 1537 are automatically protected, buildings from between 1537 and 1649 can be declared protected, and Sami buildings older than 100 years are also automatically protected (§ 4).